Affiliation:
1. Schlumberger Cambridge Research, Cambridge, United Kingdom.
Abstract
Having knowledge of the near-surface shear-velocity model is useful for various seismic processing methods such as shear-wave static estimation, wavefield separation, and geohazard prediction. I present a new method to derive a 2D near-surface shear-velocity model from ambient-noise recordings made at the seafloor. The method relies on inverting horizontal- and vertical-amplitude spectra of Scholte waves propagating in the seafloor. I compare the commonly used horizontal-over-vertical spectral ratio with three alternative spectral-ratio definitions through modeling. The modeling shows that the vertical-over-total spectral ratio has some favorable properties for inversion. I describe a nonlinear inversion method for the vertical-to-total spectral ratio of the Scholte waves and apply it to an ambient-noise data set recorded by an ocean-bottom-cable (OBC) system. A 1D near-surface shear-velocity model is derived through a joint inversion of the spectral-ratio and phase-velocity data. A 2D shear-velocity model is obtained through a local inversion of the spectral ratios averaged over small groups of receivers and shows evidence for lateral heterogeneity. The newly developed method for deriving near-surface shear-velocity distribution by inverting the Scholte-wave spectral ratio measured from seabed noise provides great opportunities for estimating the shallow-seabed shear velocity in deep water. Another benefit of the method is that, with the OBC system, no additional hardware is needed; only additional recording time is required. In this case, half an hour is sufficient.
Publisher
Society of Exploration Geophysicists
Subject
Geochemistry and Petrology,Geophysics
Cited by
20 articles.
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